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At the end of World War 11, Japan was prostrate. Ravaged by fire-bombing and the atom bomb, the nation had to rebuild all of its major cities and most of its industries. Fifty years on, however, it was enjoying annual trade surpluses of more than $80 billion. Commentators were predicting that the 21st century would be dominated by the lands of the Pacific Basin area, with Japan in the lead.
In this book, you will discover a populous nation with few doubts about its desire to become even richer than it is today. Scattered over a 3,200-kilometre island chain, some 119 million people crowd into the
20 per cent of the area that is not mountainous.
Forced to live in densely packed population centres, the Japanese have developed an all-embracing
social cohesion that involves group obligations that would be anathema to the individualistic West. Workers, for example, show intense personal loyalty to their firms. They may well be reluctant to leave the workplace before their boss - and he may choose to work from dawn to midnight!
This book examines all facets of Japanese life - the history of the country, its traditions, its arts, its attitude
to the rest of the world, the role of women. You will learn that few females attain management positions, though they continue to dominate the home. Women will usually have absolute control over the family budget, since eight out of 10 workers hand over their pay cheques to their wives. Even successful women
accept the division of labour. Says one woman TV producer: "To want to be like a man is incredibly irresponsible. To remain a woman, and still be able to improve the quality of life for the rest - this is what
I want to do."
The ancient Japanese Shinto religion - now supplemented by Buddhism and Christianity in the national
consciousness - is the spiritual backdrop against which the pursuit of worldly success takes place. It is an animistic creed that encourages a sensitivity to nature: for a believer the sound of the wind in the pines is a treasure.
Japan poses key questions about a still enigmatic country. What drives the Japanese to their frenzy of activity? Will the nation change as its new found wealth is translated into greater world power? And what has the West to learn from a society that boasts little violent crime, a high life expectancy - men live on average to be 74, women to be 80 - and exemplary industrial relations?
Here are the objective views of experts in these and other aspects of Japanese life, brought unforgettably alive in more than 100 colour photographs.With this wealth of information, you will be able to come to your own conclusions as to where Japan is heading.